Connor v. Becker

87 N.W. 1065, 62 Neb. 856, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 299
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1901
DocketNo. 11,624
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 87 N.W. 1065 (Connor v. Becker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Connor v. Becker, 87 N.W. 1065, 62 Neb. 856, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 299 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Hastings, C.

The question in this case is as to the sufficiency of the third, amended answer to set up the statute of limitations against a second amended petition. Trial was had and verdict rendered for defendant, and a motion was made by plaintiff for judgment under section 440 of the Code, which is as follows: “Where, upon the statements in the pleadings, one party is entitled by law to judgment in his favor, judgment shall be so rendered by the court, though a verdict has been found against such party.” This section has been held to be equivalent to the common law practice of judgment non obstante veredicto, and such a judgment is only to be rendered when the pleadings of the party, who has obtained a verdict, confess facts entitling the other party to a judgment. Manning v. City of Orleans, 42 Nebr., 712; Gibbon v. American Building & Loan Ass’n, 43 Nebr., 132; Johnston v. Spencer, 51 Nebr., 198. The summons which was served in the action was issued January 24, 1894. The second amended petition sets out a check in favor of plaintiffs dated Cincinnati, Ohio, December 10, 1888, and alleges presentation of it on December 11, 1888, and dishonor and protest; that the statute of limitations in Ohio allows 15 years for an action on such a check; and that at the commencement of this action “defendant had not been a resident of the state of Nebraska five years.”

The answer, which is claimed to entitle plaintiffs to a judgment, is as follows:

“First Defense. — Comes now the defendant, and, by leave of court first obtained, answering the second amended petition herein filed, says: He admits the. execution and delivery of the check set out in' the first paragraph of said petition; and admits that no part of said check has been pain except the sum of $68.12, 'which sum was paid by defendant’s assignee for creditors and accepted by plaintiff ; and admits that the plaintiffs composed and compose the partnership of Conner, Sleet & Co., as alleged in the petition; and. admits that they are the owners of the check [858]*858sued upon; and admits that the check sued upon was presented for payment and protested as alleged in the petition at the cost therein alleged and that notice of nonpayment and protest thereof was given as alleged in the petition; and admits that the statutes of the state of Ohio were and are as alleged in plaintiff’s petition; and defendant denies each and every other allegation in said petition contained.

“Second Defense. — Further answering said petition, and for a second defense thereto, the defendant says that on or about the 13th day of January, 1888, this defendant took up his residence and began permanently and legally C reside in the state of Nebraska, and ever since that time has been, and is now, a resident of the state of Nebraska; that the plaintiff’s cause of action herein sued upon, accrued on the 11th day of December, 1888, and that ever since the 3rd day of January, 1888, the plaintiffs have been able to sue the defendant in the state of Nebraska; and that prior to the first day of January, 1889, the said plaintiffs were able to have sued this defendant in the city of Cincinnati in the state of Ohio; and by reason of the facts aforesaid, this defendant says that said plaintiff’s cause of action is barred by the statute of limitations, and this defendant now pleads and relies on said statute of limitations in bar of said plaintiff’s right to recover herein.”

A considerable dispute is raised in the record as to the word “pain,” in the first paragraph. In the transcript, as originally filed, it has been marked over, to render it uncertain whether the last letter is “d” or “n.” It appears, however, that in the original, as filed, it is an “n.” This answer was filed by leave of court during the last trial; the case having been before this court on a former occasion, and a judgment for defendant reversed [56 Nebr., 343]. It is perfectly evident from the context that the pleader meant to use the word “paid,” and the substitution of a letter, which would render the entire paragraph unintelligible, will not be held to defeat his intention, and we shall treat the word as being “paid.”

[859]*859The petition alleges this payment to have been made on Jannary 29,1890, and the first contention raised by plaintiff is that this answer admits a payment which brings the instrument on which it was made within the limits fixed by the Nebraska statute of limitations. If this payment of $68.12 was a voluntary one or is to be given the effect of a voluntary payment, then this claim must be allowed. It is contended that the statement “paid by defendant’s assignee for creditors” does not amount to the allegation that it was paid by the assignee for an insolvent debtor, and without his voluntary participation. HoAvever, after verdict and in the absence of any demand for a more specific statement, this allegation must be liberally construed, and must be held to state that this payment was made by an assignee of defendant as an insolvent; and under the decision .of Whitney v. Chambers, 17 Nebr., 90, such a payment must be held not to take the case out of the operation of the statute. It is conceded in that decision that good authority can be cited for the opposite rule, but we are not asked to change it, and have no disposition to do so.

It is urged that the tAvo defenses of the answer, stated as a first defense and second defense, must be construed separately, and unless there is enough in "either one or the other of them, taken by itself, to establish a defense, the motion for judgment for plaintiff must be sustained. Counsel cite Catlin v. Pedrick, 17 Wis., 91, to this proposition that separate counts must be separately construed. Such a doctrine is certainly laid doAvn in that case, but it is to be observed that the court was dealing not with a motion for judgment, but a demurrer to each of separate counts, and not with the statement of a defense, but with the statement of a counter-claim, and is holding that the pleader, who has stated a part of his facts in making the one counter-claim, and part of them in making another, can not complain on the sustaining of the demurrers to each of them that the court did not consider them both as one. We are here, however, dealing with a motion for [860]*860judgment, which the statute authorizes only when the -defendant’s pleadings, read in connection with the plaintiff’s, disclose a right to it on plaintiff’s part.. We think if these two sections of the answer, stated as two defenses, read together and as a whole, disclose a defense to the plaintiff’s action, his motion for judgment was properly overruled. Sabin v. Austin, 19 Wis., 443, is another case where attempt to make two causes of action out of one was attacked by demurrer, and the sustaining of such demurrer upheld. A similar ruling on demurrer would doubtless obtain in our own courts, unless the pleading was helped by reference from one count to the other. Schuyler Nat. Bank v. Bollong, 24 Nebr., 823. But after verdict matters purely formal should be disregarded, and the substance of the pleading, taken as a whole, given its full effect. In case a demurrer had been filed to this petition as a whole, and not to each of its two separate counts, the court Would have been compelled to examine the whole answer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 N.W. 1065, 62 Neb. 856, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connor-v-becker-neb-1901.